Ian Jamieson wrote:I would have thought that having fewer distinct grades and multiple players with the same grade would increase the number of possible pairings.

Given the possibility of arbiter bias it is considered important that one and only one set of pairings is possible. The practical methods of doing this revolve around listing players in ranking order at the start of the tournament and using this ranking order. Whilst this could be done by lottery, the accepted method is to use the grading numbers or Elo ratings. Historically I believe it was the perceived need to show a ranking order for early pairings in events like the British Championships that lead to the previously "secret" grading numbers 200 etc., being disclosed as well as the grade 3a etc.

Last edited by Roger de Coverly on Tue Aug 25, 2015 12:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

It does beg the question what about players under 6B / 153? Or was the standard of chess in England that much higher in the 60s (?). Perhaps one of our older forum members could enlighten us.

Numbers had replaced grades for practical purposes by the end of the 1960s. From what can be established from old magazines, the grades eventually made their way down to 8 or 9. Anyone below that would have been considered "not strong enough to have a grade". With all the grading being done manually, graders were discriminatory over what events they chose to grade. Local league top divisions might be graded, but not the lowest division.

Ian Jamieson wrote:The old Clarke system would only require 8 digits at the present time because of the way you, or the person you are following, has chosen to extend the system.

Clarke choose the numbering system. Raaphi Persitz is the only player I remember around 1958 to be graded in 1aa. His grade may have been a union grade or provisional grade on <30 games. The more important point is that Clarke initially seemed to have seen 1a as the top grade from year to year although the strength of players in it may increase.

The grade letter system 1a,1b etc was completely abandoned in the 1972 lists. The national lists then went down to 209. Below that there was a combined union list.

In 1968 I recall seeing a player with a union grade of 11b when the chess unions published separate lists.

Ian Jamieson wrote:I would have thought that having fewer distinct grades and multiple players with the same grade would increase the number of possible pairings.

Given the possibility of arbiter bias it is considered important that one and only one set of pairings is possible. The practical methods of doing this revolve around listing players in ranking order at the start of the tournament and using this ranking order. Whilst this could be done by lottery, the accepted method is to use the grading numbers or Elo ratings. Historically I believe it was the perceived need to show a ranking order for early pairings in events like the British Championships that lead to the previously "secret" grading numbers 200 etc., being disclosed as well as the grade 3a etc.

Having thought about it, personally I would have stuck with the old grade and allocated the ranking order randomly instead of disclosing the 3 digit numbers, particularly for a tournament with the number of rounds that the British Championship has. If there were too many players to identify a clear winner if all the games were decisive (there's not a lot you can do about draws) then that would have been an argument for restricting the number of starting players.

Ian Jamieson wrote:The old Clarke system would only require 8 digits at the present time because of the way you, or the person you are following, has chosen to extend the system.

Clarke choose the numbering system. Raaphi Persitz is the only player I remember around 1958 to be graded in 1aa. His grade may have been a union grade or provisional grade on <30 games. The more important point is that Clarke initially seemed to have seen 1a as the top grade from year to year although the strength of players in it may increase.

The grade letter system 1a,1b etc was completely abandoned in the 1972 lists. The national lists then went down to 209. Below that there was a combined union list.

In 1968 I recall seeing a player with a union grade of 11b when the chess unions published separate lists.

Sorry.

Extending the system by adding a letter may have made sense if you thought it was only going to be for the odd player but I don't think Clarke would have extended the system that way if he had envisaged the improvement in the strength of players over the years (even if a small part of the improvement may be down to inflation)

Ian Jamieson wrote:
Having thought about it, personally I would have stuck with the old grade and allocated the ranking order randomly instead of disclosing the 3 digit numbers, particularly for a tournament with the number of rounds that the British Championship has.

You would accept a pairing of the number 1 seed with the number 2 seed in the first round then?

Ian Jamieson wrote:
Having thought about it, personally I would have stuck with the old grade and allocated the ranking order randomly instead of disclosing the 3 digit numbers, particularly for a tournament with the number of rounds that the British Championship has.

You would accept a pairing of the number 1 seed with the number 2 seed in the first round then?

If more than half the players in the tournament lie within the same eight-point grading band, the seeded Swiss system is going to go slightly haywire anyway.

Ian Jamieson wrote:
Having thought about it, personally I would have stuck with the old grade and allocated the ranking order randomly instead of disclosing the 3 digit numbers, particularly for a tournament with the number of rounds that the British Championship has.

You would accept a pairing of the number 1 seed with the number 2 seed in the first round then?

Ian Jamieson wrote:
Having thought about it, personally I would have stuck with the old grade and allocated the ranking order randomly instead of disclosing the 3 digit numbers, particularly for a tournament with the number of rounds that the British Championship has.

You would accept a pairing of the number 1 seed with the number 2 seed in the first round then?

How often is the number 1 seed going to play the number 2 seed in the first round if the ranking order is allocated randomly? Not very often.

I would be prepared to accept the small risk of this happening to avoid what I see as the boring top half vs bottom half pairings we see in a seeded swisses.

Request to moderators - this thread is in danger of being a thread for talking about seeded swisses rather than grading. If one of you has the time could one of you perhaps split the thread perhaps starting with Adam Raoof's post